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- The CORRIM phase 1 Interim Report, Guidelines, and its
accompanying appendices are accessible below. They are easiest
to read and navigate using the hot-links, but if you would
like to print or save a report click on the blue underlined
"pdf" that follows the report's description and
you will be linked to a pdf version of that report.
Guidelines:
These research guidelines were developed to ensure a consistent
and comparable approach among the various institutions,
panels, and task groups conducting CORRIM research. The
guidelines detail the information required, include definitions,
conventions and measurement units, and cover a range of
methodological issues with particular emphasis on establishing
boundaries and analysis limits to scope studies. (To print
or save Guidelines use the pdf
version)
Interim Report: This report provides interim
research results from a study to develop a database and
modeling capability to adequately describe the environmental
performance of building materials and their uses, addressing
key wood materials such as lumber, plywood, composite panels
and other wood derived products. (To print or save the Interim
Report use the pdf
version)
Appendix
A: Forest Resources -Pacific Northwest and
Southeast
(To
print or save Appendix A use the pdf
version)
Appendix
B: Softwood Lumber - Pacific Northwest
(To
print or save Appendix B use the pdf
version)
Appendix
C: Softwood Lumber - Southeast Region
(To
print or save Appendix C use the pdf
version)
Appendix
D: Softwood Plywood- Pacific Northwest and
Southeast
(To
print or save Appendix D use the pdf
version)
Appendix
E: Oriented Strandboard- Southeast
(To
print or save Appendix E use the pdf
version)
Appendix
F: Design of Residential Building Shells -
Minneapolis and Atlanta
(To
print or save Appendix F use the pdf
version)
Appendix
G: Environmental Impacts of a Single Family
Building Shell - From
Harvest
to Construction
(To
print or save Appendix G use the pdf
version)
-
Below is a condensed version of the Phase 1 Interim
Research Report on the Research plan to develop Environmental-Performance
Measures for Renewable Building Materials With Alternatives
for Improved Performance.
PHASE I INTERIM RESEARCH REPORT ON THE
RESEARCH PLAN TO DEVELOP ENVIRONMENTAL-PERFORMANCE MEASURES
FOR RENEWABLE BUILDING MATERIALS WITH ALTERNATIVES FOR
IMPROVED PERFORMANCE
CORRIM Phase 1 Report:
LIFE CYCLE ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE OF RENEWABLE BUILDING
MATERIALS IN THE CONTEXT OF RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION
PREFACE
This report provides interim research results from a
study to develop a database and modeling capability to
adequately describe the environmental performance of building
materials and their uses, addressing key wood materials
such as lumber, plywood, composite panels and other wood
derived products. The report documents progress on the
original research plan developed for the Department of
Energy and the American Forest and Paper Association under
Agenda 2020 priorities for pre-competitive research needs.
The Consortium for Research on Renewable Industrial Materials
(CORRIM) with the financial support of its 21 institutional
and company members and the Department of Energy developed
(1) a research plan, (2) a Data, Standards and Procedures:
Guideline for LCI and Economic Analysis, and (3) an organizational
approach to conducting the research plan in 1998. A Phase
I research plan was designed to pilot-test the development
of data and analysis procedures for each stage of processing,
while providing data for the primary wood producing regions
of the US. This Phase I report covers the first 5 modules
of the 22 module research plan focusing on forest resources
from the US Southeast and Pacific Northwest and residential
construction in a warm climate (Atlanta) and a cold climate
(Minneapolis). The USFS Forest Products Laboratory, 14
research institutions and 10 companies are providing financial
support.
This report provides environmental and economic data
on all life-cycle stages from planting and growing the
renewable raw material through the manufacturing of product,
design and construction of buildings as well as activities
associated with occupation, use and final demolition.
The collected data and subsequent analysis follows consistent
definitions and collection procedures that facilitate
integration of results across the full life cycle for
all stages of processing in order to address environmental
performance questions. The findings are interim, reflecting
a mid-point progress report that intentionally identifies
data and procedural inadequacies that need to be corrected
before completion of the final report. One of the more
substantive impacts of this research effort has been the
enhancement of institutional capabilities to support the
development of environmental performance data and analysis.
The report is organized as follows: Major points are
very briefly summarized in an executive summary preceding
the table of contents. Section 1 provides the background,
mission, organization of effort, and objectives. Section
2 provides the Life Cycle Inventory and Analysis (LCI/LCA)
framework. The findings for each stage of processing are
reported on in 7 modules (Appendices A-G). The appendices
are essentially stand alone LCI reports for intermediate
and final products. The last module, Appendix G, covers
the construction aspects, integrating the information
from the other modules for a residential structural building
shell. Information on final building use, maintenance
and ultimate disposal will be completed for the final
report. The forest resource module demonstrates the impact
of management alternatives on environmental performance.
Additional scenarios and sensitivity analysis examining
the impacts of changes in management and processing technologies
will be included in the final report.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Consortium for Research on Renewable Industrial Materials
(CORRIM) was organized as a non-profit company supported
by 15 research institutions for the purpose of updating
and expanding a 1976 landmark study by the National Academy
of Science on the energy implications of producing and
using renewable building materials. We use the same CORRIM
acronym as the 1976 study, which was managed by a committee
of scientists.
An expanding list of environmental-performance issues
has gained considerable attention over the last two decades,
yet there had been no update of the 1976 CORRIM study,
or extensions to include environmental issues not addressed
in the original study until this effort was undertaken.
Without a scientifically sound, life-cycle database on
performance measures, there can be no basis on which to
formulate public policy affecting the renewable materials
industries, or for companies to develop strategic investment
plans that could improve environmental performance.
This study's objectives are:
- To create a consistent database of environmental performance
measures associated with the production, use, maintenance,
re-use, and disposal of alternative wood and non-wood
materials used in light construction, i.e., from forest
resource regeneration or mineral extraction to end use
and disposal, thereby covering the full product life-cycle
from "cradle to grave."
- To develop an analytical framework for evaluating life-cycle
environmental and economic impacts for alternative building
materials in competing or complementary applications so
that decision-makers can make consistent and systematic
comparisons of options for improving environmental performance.
- To make source data available for many users, including
resource managers and product manufacturers, architects
and engineers, environmental protection and energy conservation
analysts, and global environmental policy and trade specialists.
- To manage an organizational framework to obtain the
best scientific information available as well as provide
for effective and constructive peer review.
Data was collected through surveys of a range of mill
types within processing regions characterizing all inputs
and outputs associated with the production of lumber, plywood,
and oriented strandboard. For forest regeneration, growth
and log production, growth and yield models representative
of conditions in the Pacific Northwest and Southeast growing
regions and recent studies of harvesting activities reported
in the literature were found to satisfy most data requirements
with minimal new data collection. The most difficult aspect
of data collection has been to maintain consistency across
many products made from different processes, and wood species.
Product characteristics vary substantially, as do the measurement
practices used by different producers. Analysis of the mass
balance in and out of a processing stage provided a validity
check on the data quality. Different measurement conventions
and imprecise measurement of characteristics such as moisture
content sometimes corrupted data collection. In selected
cases, as that for softwood green lumber, additional data
will be collected prior to the final report to improve the
sample size and resolve mass balance discrepancies.
Based on analysis of the designs of the representative
residential structures for a cold climate (Minneapolis)
and a warm climate (Atlanta), fifteen different wood and
non-wood materials were found to be used. Additional materials
were used in the generation of energy used in production
processes.
In the United States, a little over half of the wood produced
in the forest is used directly in construction. The environmental
burdens from the production processes used to produce building
materials were allocated according to the mass of materials
used in building construction. Other burdens were allocated
to co-products such as paper. Similarly, the burdens accumulated
from transportation, processing energy, and construction
energy were allocated to the building according to the mass
of materials used in building construction. The environmental
impacts from energy uses are derived from national/regional
grids of purchased electrical energy and fossil fuels. Thus
the environmental burdens derived from energy consumption
are allocated according to the specific type of energy consumed
(7 types) and its place of origin (raw material and manufacturing
producing regions and construction regions).
In this study, sixteen different kinds of air emissions
are reported for each stage of production (extraction, manufacturing,
transportation, and construction). Twenty-five different
sources of water emissions are identified with manufacturing.
Six categories of solid waste are tracked. Vital measures
of the forestland environment are also tracked to characterize
impacts on water, habitat, carbon and biodiversity, several
of which require landscape-wide measures to be useful. This
complex array of environmental outputs for the construction
of a residential building are reduced to environmental performance
indices to simplify the analysis and communication of findings.
However, the science behind best weighting schemes to represent
aggregate environmental risk indices for water, air, solid
waste, global warming potential, and forest health are still
evolving, and for the most part beyond the analysis provided
by CORRIM. The environmental impacts of forest management
are being analyzed at the landscape level and will be available
for the final report.
Indices for water and air emissions, solid waste, and global
warming potential were derived by the ATHENA Institute,
a Canadian research institute and cooperator on the project.
The ATHENA model provides Life Cycle Inventory (LCI)
measures based on the bill of materials developed for the
US house designs and the LCI data that was developed for
each US product, thereby extending the ATHENA database
to cover US producing regions. These index measures currently
do not account for the impacts from use, maintenance and
disposal of a building, nor do they integrate the carbon
stored in the forest as developed in the Forest Resource
module; these are impacts that develop over a long period
of time in contrast to the narrow time frame associated
with impacts from extraction to construction.
With one exception, all of these index measures indicate
significantly lower environmental risk for the wood design
in Atlanta and Minneapolis compared to non-wood construction
(see table below). The one exception is in Minneapolis where
the steel design produces 9 % less solid waste than the
wood design. From experience with sensitivity analysis ATHENA
considers relative differences of less than 15% as not significantly
different.
|
| Minneapolis Design |
Wood |
Steel |
Difference |
Other Design vs
Wood(%Change) |
| Embodied Energy ( Gj) |
186 |
308 |
122 |
66% |
| Global Warming Potential (CO2 kg) |
39810 |
59290 |
19480 |
49% |
| Air Emission Index (index scale) |
2778 |
4711 |
1933 |
70% |
| Water Emission Index(index scale) |
185 |
1179 |
994 |
537% |
| Solid Waste(total kg) |
12110 |
11020 |
-1090 |
-9% |
| Atlanta design |
Wood |
Concrete |
Difference |
Other Design Vs
Wood(%Change) |
| Embodied Energy ( Gj) |
115 |
162 |
47 |
41% |
| Global Warming Potential (CO2 kg) |
20020 |
33130 |
13110 |
65% |
| Air Emission Index (index scale) |
1035 |
1862 |
827 |
80% |
| Water Emission Index(index scale) |
86 |
99 |
13 |
15% |
| Solid Waste(total kg) |
4270 |
7970 |
3700 |
87% |
The primary difference between the Minneapolis wood and
steel house is the use of materials for floors and walls.
Both designs share the same basement and roof elements.
For the Atlanta structure, the only major difference between
the wood and concrete design is in the exterior wall structure
as both designs use concrete floors and wood roofs. Making
cross design comparisons at the wall and floor section shows
much more dramatic percentage differences than for the buildings
as a whole (last two columns of the table below) since some
parts of the structure share common materials, and the construction
process itself is energy intensive and not that much different
across the designs. In effect a substantial environmental
performance difference for nearly substitutable products
may not seem so great for a completed structure with many
common components.
An examination of a change in forest management suggests
small but significant changes in index measures. A small
increase in PNW management intensity resulting in an estimated
5% increase in forest productivity increases the availability
of wood such that the number of wood homes built in Minneapolis
increases and the number of those built of steel decreases.
It is assumed, for simplicity, that the increased forest
productivity forces product substitution within the region
rather than imports and exports from other regions or international
sources. Consequently there is a 6% reduction in embodied
energy and air emissions, a 25% reduction in water emissions
and a 1% increase in solid waste. The same forest productivity
increase in the Southeast results in a 17.5% increase in
the construction of wood homes vs. concrete in Atlanta and
a reduction in all output measures ranging from 3% for water
emissions to 13% for solid wastes.
To support this environmental assessment for a residential
structure and be able to analyze the impact for each process,
LCIs, were developed for each wood product (logs, lumber,
plywood, and oriented strandboard) used in home construction.
The Forest Resource module (Appendix A) provides the environmental,
energy and resource impact data on the growth, management,
and harvesting of logs and reforestation of harvested timber
for the Pacific Northwest (PNW) and Southeast regions of
the US for a representative acreage within each region.
The study calculates volume harvested for three general
combinations of management intensity and site productivity
for each region. The combinations were reduced to a single
estimate of yield using weighting factors for the acreage
under each management regime. The weighting scheme creates
a base case for each region. Alternative weights resulting
from increasing the acres under a different level of management
intensity are used to produce alternative cases, with a
different calculated volume. For example, the increase in
merchantable volume under a prescribed alternative case
was 21% in the Southeast (including the volume from a partial
second rotation when rotation ages were reduced) and a nearly
16% increase in volume in the PNW.
The portion of lumber and pulpwood produced in the Southeast
changed slightly under the alternative scenario; lumber
share declined 2.1 percentage points as pulpwood share increased
2.1 percentage points. The alternative scenario also leads
to a 3.2 year reduction in the average rotation age in the
Southeast, which is responsible for the percentage shifts
in lumber and pulpwood produced. Lumber output increased
15%, only 68% of the merchantable volume increase. Lumber
share remained at 100% in the base and alternative PNW scenarios.
System costs increased by around one percentage point above
the percent change in the amount of merchantable volume
removed in the Southeast, while increasing about the same
percent as merchantable volume removed in the PNW. A similar
result is observed for fuel and lubricant consumption during
harvesting operations: an 11% increase in the Southeast
and 16% increase in the PNW roughly corresponding to the
changes in merchantable volumes harvested, although there
appears to be a slight increase in the consumption factors
in the Southeast due to the change in rotation age and products
harvested. The increase in harvested volume resulted from
using 4 times more nitrogen and phosphate in the Southeast
and 2 times mores nitrogen and phosphate in the PNW as fertilizer
inputs in conjunction with the other management changes.
Along with harvested volumes, the Forest Resource module
also produces harvesting cost data and air emission estimates
related to stand growth and harvesting, and regeneration.
Resources used to produce the harvested volume, such as
fuel, fertilizer and herbicides, are quantified and their
impacts reported in the Environmental Impact Report (Appendix
G) during the extraction phase of the single family shell
construction.
The Forest Resource Module also produces estimates of tree
biomass by component. These estimates are used to approximate
the standing and removed carbon pool over time. Other environmental
performance measures including indices of stand structure,
diversity, and habitat and fragmentation will be developed
in subsequent phases of the project using a landscape approach
to forest management will be developed in subsequent phases
of the project.
Harvested volumes from the two forest resource regions
are considered in the context of lumber manufacturing in
the Pacific Northwest and Southeast regions. Here the research
developed independent LCIs for the two regions. The two
regional lumber manufacturing modules were developed to
provide the environmental, energy and resource impact data
associated with the manufacturing of softwood lumber. In
the Northwest (Appendix B) a survey produced the data for
sawing, drying and planing processes. A unit process approach
produced detailed descriptions of activities and the resources
used to produce specific outputs. For example, the sawing
process involves log movement within the mill, sorting and
storage, delivery to debarkers, and bucking to length. The
logs are then debarked and sawn into rough lumber producing
rough lumber, resulting in the CO-products pulp chips, bark
and sawdust. The rough lumber is transported within the
mill to stacks for kiln dryers or planer facilities. Maintenance
work on equipment and vehicles are also recorded, as were
emissions to air, water and land. The results of the survey
work produced detailed information that was then analyzed
with the SimaPro life cycle program. The SimaPro analysis
considered four processes, including energy generation in
addition to the three processes mentioned above. The result
of the analysis produces unit factor estimates for one Mbf
of planed dry lumber. These unit factor estimates include
raw material use, airborne, waterborne, and solid emissions,
and energy use. A similar module was used for Southeastern
lumber production (Appendix C).
Harvested volumes from the two forest resource regions
were also considered in the context of softwood plywood
manufacturing in the Pacific Northwest and Southeast regions
(Appendix D). Surveys were implemented in a manner similar
to those used in conjunction with the the lumber manufacturing
modules. The plywood process was defined in terms of six
processes: bucking and debarking, block conditioning, peeling
and clipping, drying, lay-up and pressing, and trimming
and sawing. The results of the survey work produced detailed
information that was then analyzed with the SimaPro life
cycle program to produce unit factor estimates for one Msf
of 3/8-in basis of plywood.
An LCI for Oriented Strand Board (OSB) production was produced
in a similar manner (Appendix E); however for this interim
report, the integrated residential construction analysis
used plywood as the default for all panels because the material
balances were not completed at the time that the integration
analysis was performed. The survey also collected information
on log transport, production of phenol-formaldehyde and
MDI resins and wax.
Data is now available to provide a comparison of energy
and resource impacts relative to the 1976 CORRIM study.
Data is also available to provide a measure of resource
use efficiency. With the LCI data produced by the lumber,
plywood and OSB modules, LCIs can be produced for derived
products such as glulams, trusses, and laminated veneer
lumber, all of which will be incorporated into the final
report. Management and process improvements can also be
identified and analyzed with key scenarios planned for the
final report. An analysis of costs and carbon accounting
have been initiated in Phase I and can now be completed
in conjunction with a more thorough integration with resource
harvesting, production, and the ultimate use, maintenance,
and disposal phases of each product.
With these additions and corrections, the final report
will provide:
- Measures of carbon emissions, and carbon storage on
the forest floor and in wood products for each stage of
processing and region, and comparable impacts for policy
alternatives that result in substitute products.
- Identification of alternative methods for reducing
emissions with quantified impacts across stages of processing
and geographic regions.
- Identification of performance measures and methods
to improve environmental performance in areas such as
(1) energy and material-use efficiency, (2) biodiversity
and habitat protection indices for uplands or riparian
zones as well as other measures of the health and sustainability
of forest ecosystems, (3) solid waste reduction, and (4)
reduction in the production and emission targeted potentially
toxic chemicals.
- Assessments of the impact of policy proposals on the
ability of the forest sector to meet expected consumer
demand for products.
- Cost effective approaches to meet changing environmental
goals, and develop investment strategies that are more
responsive to those needs.
- Opportunities to adopt strategies that improve environmental
performance where costs are not a limiting factor and
support for the development of policy alternatives that
could offset cost impacts when necessary.
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